Skulpt Smart Fitness Trainer

What it claims

This handheld Chisel device is a body scanner that is designed to measure your muscle mass and quality, offering workout and nutritional guidance to help you reach your goal.

As with many health tech gadgets, the Skulpt monitor also connects with an app on your phone, where you can track your progress.

According to Skulpt, the Chisel translates your fat percentage and muscle quality into advice on steps you can take to improve your fitness level.

Spire Health Tag

What it claims

These lightweight little gadgets can be clipped onto your clothes and largely forgotten about until they deliver your results (to an app on your phone, of course).

According to Spire, the tag uses “advanced learning algorithms” and deep learning to provide guidance on sleep, stress and day-to-day movement.

It works by analyzing your breathing and heart rate.

Luminette glasses

What it claims

Seasonal Affected Disorder affects around one in 15 people in the UK, while many of us can generally feel a bit down in the winter months with a lack of sunlight contributing to low moods and lack of energy.

Enter the Luminette glasses – a wearable light therapy device that aims to pick up our mood by giving us a dose of ‘sunshine’.

FITGIRL hip bands

(Fitgirl)

What it claims

Not all gadgets have to be powered by tech, and sometimes a gym accessory works just as well to help you reach your goal.

FITGIRL offers a range of exercise gear you can use to up your game in the gym. Its resistance hipbands are designed to help you warm up and tone up, making your workout that little bit more difficult for enhanced results.

Qardiocore ECG monitor

(Qardio)

What it claims

This core strap monitor is at the pricier end of the scale, but its makers claim to provide “clinically accurate heart activity monitoring” explains its RRP.

In fact, Qardio claims the ECG results its band provides can be shared with doctors and healthcare providers so they can see live data.